438 
C87 



1S0G ' K 






Class _U-4 
Book_X_2_3 



■_ _ 



"FATHER GIDDINGS" BODGES UNDER TfflS 

BUSH WITH HIS COLORED FRIEND. 



" CRISP WITH NUMIDIAN CURL.»-Bulwer, 

< t Wflflt. Eon. Hte*. floe. 

The House, on the 15th of January, 1859, being in Committee of the Whole on 
the codification of the Revenue laws, (House bill, No. 487,) introduced by Mr. John 
Cochrane, of New York. 

Mr. GIDDINGS moved to amend the bill as follows : 

After the word " same" in the eighth line, section fifty-seven, page 52, insert the following : 
And the eighth, ninth and tenth sections of the act, entitled, " An act to prohibit the importation 

of slaves into any port or place within the jurisdiction of the United States, from and after the 1st 

day of January, 1S0S." 

By this amendment, the restrictions of the act of 1807 against the foreign slave- 
trade and against its abuse under the guise of the coast-wise or inter-State slave- 
trade, are repealed. These sections regulate but restrict the coast-wise slave-trade, 
and were intended to prevent the foreign slave-trade from using a domestic guise ; 
and this is the proposition which Mr. Giddings' amendment proposes to repeal. Af- 
ter some general remarks, the following discussion ensued, as reported in the Con- 
gressional Globe: 

Mr. GIDDINGS. I have another thing in view. I know I am unpopular in my 
views. Everything is unpopular upon this floor which has not reference to political 
matters. I want to make this a political question. I say to the gentlemen upon 
the other side that I desire to make an issue with the Democratic party of Ohio 
upon sustaining this very slave-trade. Will they go with me upon that? I think 
they will. It will do us good, and them no hurt. Their story is told anywhere. 
I desire throughout the whole North to see this made an issue. Even in Pennsylva- 
nia, the State of my own nativity, I would see the question made directly to the 
people there, to see who will sustain this commerce in human flesh, and who are op- 
posed to it. I am in earnest upon this subject. I do not know as you believe it, Mr. 
Chairman, but I believe it is a fact that my name has been suggested as a candidate for 
the Governorship of Ohio; and if I should be nominated, of which I do not think 
there is any real prospect, I want to make this issue directly with my opponent, 
and with the whole Democratic party; and I want to see my friend there from the 
metropolitan district of Ohio (Mr. Cox) driven from under the bush. I want to see 
him compelled to stand out and say whether he is in favor of continuing the slave- 
trade, or whether he is against it. I believe he would be against it. Would he not? 

Mr. COX. Tf the gentleman will allow me, I will say I do not understand that 
the Democratic party, North or South, are committed in^favor of the slave-trade ; 
and the gentleman knows it well. 

Mr. GIDDINGS. Well, I am glad he has announced it, and I want to hold him 
up to his constituents as denouncing the slave-trade, and he will be buried so far 
out of sight that the hand of political resurrection will never reach him. He is an 
excellent gentleman, and if he repents we will receive him into the Republican ranks ; 
though, like Paul, he has been persecuting the saints. [Laughter.] 



f*n4S 



* 

As I was remarking, I desire that this question shall go home to the people. / 
desire to sec my colleagues of the Democratic party vjion this floor vott for my amend- 
ment, and npt against it. God knows that 1 do not rejoice in the death of any sin- 
ner. [Laughter.] 1 would lather that they should repent and come with us. I 
want them to conic out, however, end stand boldly upon their true position, what- 
ever it is. 1 am in sober earnest. 1 ask gentlemen from the South, 1 ask gentlemen 
who are actuated by honest motives, and who stand boldly for what they believe to 
be right, to bring these men out. "Will you do it \ Let us put them upon the record. 
Let us have a vote upon this amendment. Let it go into the House, where the yea» 
and nays may be called on it. Let gentlemen take their position as they please. 
This is a legitimate party question. 1 hope gentlemen will meet it manfully. 

Mr. COX — Mr. Chairman, as my friend from Ohio has seen proper to refer to me 
in the course of bis remarks in reference to his amendment, allow me to pay my 
respects to him for a few moments. The other day, when the gentleman spoke in- 
the Committee of the Whole on the state of the Union, he gave expression to ideas 
to which 1 believe the people of his State and mine will not yield their assent. That 
speech, which was not unlike his Bpeech of today, was rather for the purpose of a 
warning and a threat to his own ^Republican friends, than as a challenge to the Demo- 
cratic party. 

The CHAIRMAN". The time for general debate has expired. 
Mr. COX. I hope I may be permitted to proceed. 

Mr. JOHN COCHRANE. I will yield to the gentleman from Ohio to go on with 
his remarks, if there be no objection, and it is not taken out of my time. 

Mr. WASHBURNE, of Illinois. I wish to make a remark. The general debate 
is closed. This is along bill; and 1 tell the gentleman from New York, that if he 
does not insist upon the strictest enforcement of the rule that members shall be eon- 
fined in their remarks to the pending amendment, he will never get through ten 
pages of his bill. 

Mr. JOHN COCHRANE. It is my intention to do so when the committee gets to 
that stage of the bill. 

Mr. COX. I hope the rule will not now be enforced upon me. I will move au 
amendment, or ask unanimous consent to go on with my reply. 
The CHAIRMAN. Is there objection? 

Mr. MORGAN. Does the gentleman from New York wave his right to close the 
debate in a speech of one hour 'i 
The CHAIRMAN. He does not. 

Mr. MORGAN. Then I insist upon the enforcement of the rule. 
Mr. KELLOGG. I hope the gentleman will withdraw his objection. The gentle- 
man from Ohio (Mr. Cox) ought to have leave to reply to his colleague. 
Mr. MORGAN. I must insist upon my objection. 

Mr. JOHN COCHRANE. I am willing to yield to the gentleman from Ohio, pro- 
vided it is not taken out of my time. 

Mr. MORGAN. As there seems to be a general desire that I shall withdraw my 
objection, I do so. After the conclusion of the gentleman's remarks 1 will insist 
upon it. 

Mr. COX. Mr. Chairman, T prefer to reply to the remarks of my venerable friend 
now, because I do not want them to go unanswered to the people of Ohio. He has 
endeavored to place his colleagues here in the position of sustaining the slave-trade; 
when he knows, as well as any man in this House, that the Democratic party, North 
and South have, by their solemn action in the last Congress, voted that it was in- 
expedient and unjust to reopen the slave-trade; and when he knows that the great, 
body of the people, North and South, is opposed to that trad.'. And, sir, when he 
tenders that issue to the Democratic party in Ohio, or elsewhere, In- tenders an issue 
that cannot be made up before the country. The gentleman knows lull well the 
legislation on the subject; and, so far as I know, -we have laws stringent enough at 
present against the slave-trade ; for they make it piracy. 
Mr. GIDDINGS. I have referred to the coast-wise trade. 

Mr. COX. The gentleman undertook to place the Democratic party in a false 
position. He undertook to convey the idea in his speech that the party to which I 
belom- was a pro-slavery party, when he knows, sir, better than any other man, 



4 



that that party is neither a pro-slavery party nor an anti-slaveiy party ; that it has 
always planted itself upon the doctrine that Congress should not interfere in relation 
to that subject, either to establish or to prohibit it; and that by no congressional 
contrivance should it compel territorial or State Legislatures, in any -way to estab- 
lish, prohibit, regulate, or interfere with the institution of slavery. It leaves that 
subject to the people to deal with as they may think proper ; to deal with it by the 
popular ballot, by the voice of the majority, which is the largest reach of popular 
and personal liberty. 

I know the theory of the gentleman. It is based on an equality which he finds 
in the Declaration of Independence. He misinterprets that declaration as he misin- 
terprets the Democratic policy; for I say that the highest refinement of personal 
liberty is that which is called popular liberty. It includes all other liberties. The 
right to cast a ballot in respect to local affairs is the sacred emblem and instrument 
of true republicanism. That little quiet right, which every man exercises when he 
drops his ballot, as the snow flake, may seem nothing in and of itself, but it becomes, 
by combination, the voice of a great people. It becomes an avalanche of power, 
which makes our constitutions, which protects property, conscience, reputation, life, 
and personal liberty. Popular liberty is the doctrine of the Democratic party ; 
and the gentleman cannot lay down any doctrine which would surbordinate the 
rights of popular liberty to his philanthropic ideas in regard to personal liberty. 

Mr. Chairman, allow me simply to add these remarks before I sit down : the.gentle- 
man has seen proper to say that he was spoken of as a candidate for the governorship 
of our State. I am sure I mean no disrespect to him when I say, that I hope he may 
be nominated, and that his friends will have the courage to stand on his doctrines 
as he enunciated them. I know that during the last canvass in Ohio, a large seg- 
ment of the Republican party, in my part of the State, held with the distinguished 
ex-Governor Corwin, to the idea, that the Philadelphia platform did allow the ad- 
mission of slave States. Yes ; and they quoted the vote of the honorable gentleman 
himself on the Crittenden-Montgomery bill to sanction the doctrine. (Laughter.) 
Now, my friend, who is a sort of Jove on the Republican Olympus, hurled two 
epistolary' thunderbolts against Governor Corwin, but never got a response from 
him. Let the gentleman come to Central Ohio, and we will give him a hearing and 
a warm welcome. Let him come there with his theories on personal liberty, and 
we will give hTin time to ponder on the philosophy of old Aristides, who sa!d that 
he yielded to the popular will in every regard, even when it drove him into exile. 
(Laughter.) 

But, Mr. Chairman, I will not detain the House further. The gentleman planted 
himself, in his speech the other day, on the idea of negro equality with the white 
man. True, he did not come up to it exactly in his printed speech, but he did so on 
the floor. I notice, that in his printed speech he has interpolated the idea that he 
was not willing quite that the African shovdd vote in our elections. Now, let him 
come up manfully and carry out his own ideas of equality. We will meet him on 
that, as we will meet him at all times in regard to all his ideas. 

Mr. GIDDINGS. The gentleman has totally misunderstood me. 

Mr. COX. Is the gentleman in favor of allowing the negroes of Ohio to vote? 

Mr. GIDDINGS. I have expressed no opinion on that subject. (Laughter.) But 
if the negro have equal intelligence and morality and virtue, I would give him all 
the rights that I would give to my friend. I judge men by their virtue and intelli- 
gence, and not by their complexion. 

Mr. COX. Is my colleague willing to give to Africans in our State the right to 
vote? 

Mr. GIDDINGS. I am willing to give that right to all men of equal knowledge, 
morality, and virtue. 

Mr. COX. Will the gentleman come out and answer my question categorically ? 

Mr. GIDDINGS. I will. I say that so far as the negroes equal the members of 
the Democratic party, in knowledge, morality, and virtue, I will give them leave to 
vote. • 

Mr. COX. I have heard the gentleman state this insult before in one of his let- 
ters; but why does he not come up to his general position and say whether he is or 
is not in favor of African equality" and negro suffrage in Ohio ? 

Mr. GIDDINGS. I repeat what I have just stated; I put the negroes and the 
Democrats on the same footing. 



Mr.. COX. Answer the question, sir. The gentleman talked about my hiding 
under the bush. Let him come out if he dare from his covert ! (Laughter.) 

Mr. GIDDINGS. I say that I do not interfere in this question as to superiority 
between the Democrats and the negroes. 

Mr. COX. He talk of his Democratic colleagues skulking under the bush ! He 
himself now shirks. He dare not answer my question. I will not press the gentle- 
man further. My respect for him will not allow me to put him to the torture fur- 
ther. He never could get the nomination for the governorship if he had answered 
my question categorically; and I am anxious he should be nominated. (Laughter.) 

Mr. GIDDINGS. So far as the Demoaratic party is concerned, I repeat that I 
judge the Africans by their intelligence and virtue. I do not enter into the quarrel 
between them with the Republicans. I do not mean to put them on an equality 
with the Republicans. 

Mr. COX. The gentleman does not answer my question. I therefore will not 
press him further. 

All that I wished was to put the Democratic party right in regard to this matter 
of slavery ; and they are right on it. The gentleman may go on and get the nomi- 
nation for the governorship, and make his alliance, if he can, in northern and sou- 
thern Ohio, and we will meet him at Philippi. 



Printed by Lemuel Towers. 



